(Bloomberg) -- Hillary Clinton’s use of a personal e-mail account while U.S. Secretary of State may not have broken the law though it exposed her to hacking and ran counter to the Obama administration’s

Internet providers are widely expected to sue the Federal Communications Commission to overturn the agency's new net neutrality rules. Who will fire the opening salvo, and when, is becoming the subject

Clinton faces new questions for possibly breaking federal rules as secretary of state. The State Department says the likely Democratic presidential candidate emailed exclusively from a personal address

As Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton used a personal email address when conducting official business rather than using a government address. What impact will the disclosure have on Clinton's reputation

The New York Times reported Monday that Clinton’s team sent State 55,000 pages of emails two months ago that it deemed part of official business after the State Department requested her official emails.

Hillary Clinton's exclusive use of a personal email account to conduct official business as secretary of State caused seems to have stayed within the law, experts say. “What she did was not technically

Former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton might have violated a federal law during her four years in office after conducting all of her state business using a private e-mail account instead of an official

Dubai Courts to boost customer satisfaction via new e-service Dubai: The process to publish online legal notifications at the Dubai Courts Department [DCD] has become swifter thanks to an e-service that

Hillary Clinton's practice of using her personal email account to conduct official business while she was secretary of state falls into a legal gray area. It's a federal crime to "willfully" destroy federal

Barbara Pickett and her son turned to the internet after a series of layoffs. (Supplied) It was the final blow in a series of job losses for Barbara Pickett. Last August, she was told she no longer had

Hollywood Reporter Monday 2nd March, 2015 On Friday, the parent company of Nickelodeon filed a lawsuit against the anonymous operators of the site for allegedly violating copyrights "willfully, maliciously